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Perhaps now you will get more subscribers Mr. Rupert Murdoch
8 hours ago ago from Keep America At Work
My hat is off to you because we need a fair and balanced newspaper here in America that will tell the who, what, where, when and why of what is happening to Americans in America. Unfortunately the Wall Street Journal will not be able to do that because it needs to focus on business issues. How about you buy the USA Today and let me use it cover news the old fashioned way meaning, when we hear of a story, we get to the bottom of it ...
Related contentWho didn’t see this coming?
41 minutes ago ago from The Word Trade: An Evolution
When Rupert Murdoch took over The Wallstreet Journal, everyone at News Corporation , which also owns Fox News, was like, Oh, no. He won't be involved in the editorial side of things. And, Things will remain as they always have. Yeah, right. Murdoch can't help himself, he's compelled by his universe-size ego to stick his nose inside every single one of the newsrooms he owns and spin his Conservative spin. I hate to say it, but I and ...
Related contentThe NY Times Laments Media Bias -- at the Wall Street Journal
1 hour, 56 minutes ago ago from NewsBusters.org - Exposing Liberal Media Bias
Let no one say the New York Times is blind to media bias. It's uncovered it at the (conservative) New York Post and (conservative) Fox News -- although admissions of the paper's own clear liberal tilt are few and far between. David Carr's Monday media column, “ Tilting Rightward At Journal ,” found a conservative slant at yet another Rupert Murdoch-owned media outlet, The Wall Street Journal. The text box: “Under Murdoch's rule, a new ...
Related contentNew York Times and Wall Street Journal clash over ‘anti-Obama’ claims
2 hours ago ago from Photomaniacal
WSJ hits back after rival states it has been 'tilting rightwards' and that owner Rupert Murdoch uses it to play politics' The Wall Street Journal editor-in-chief, Robert Thomson, has today claimed the New York Times is about his paper's increasing success while its own circulation and credibility are in retreat . Thomson made his comments in an angry riposte at the New York Times after it published a column alleging that the ...
Related contentWSJ 2 years after Murdoch: 'Newsier, less analytical,' 'increasingly successful,' or both?
1 hour, 18 minutes ago ago from Shaping the Future of the Newspaper Blog
Rupert Murdoch bought Dow Jones & Co. and its flagship newspaper the Wall Street Journal two years ago on Sunday in a US$5.16 billion takeover bid, which ended more than 100 years of ownership by the Bancroft family. At the time , Murdoch stood atop four boxes of copy paper to reassure journalists that their "tremendous values would be preserved under new ownership. "If anything, you will find us trying to set a higher bar." Since then, ...
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The Media Equation: Tilting Rightward at Journal
15 hours ago ago from The New York Times
Sunday was the second anniversary of the sale of The Wall Street Journal to Rupert Murdoch 's News Corporation . At that time, a chorus of journalism church ladies (I was among them) warned that one of the crown jewels of American journalism now resided in the hands of a roughneck, and predicted that he would use it to his own ends. Mark Lennihan/Associated Press Rupert Murdoch, a lifelong conservative, addressing the newsroom ...
Related contentWall Street Journal versus New York Times: It is so on!
3 hours ago ago from DailyFinance
Tensions between The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal are on the rise as the two papers increasingly compete for the same pool of general-interest and local-market readers. A column by Times media critic David Carr accusing the Journal of slanting its news coverage in the conservative direction favored by owner Rupert Murdoch has drawn a sharp response from the Journal 's managing editor, Robert Thomson -- who offers a pretty ...
Related contentTurnabout Is Fair Play: BoomTown Decodes Rupe's Journalism-Is-Not-a-Free-Cow Op-Ed! [BoomTown]
9 hours ago ago from All Things D
Last week, BoomTown translated an opinion piece written by Google CEO Eric Schmidt and published in The Wall Street Journal that focused on defending the search giant from criticism that it was, well, killing journalism. One of the louder critics, in fact, has been Rupert Murdoch, chairman and CEO of News Corp. (NWS), who has been loaded for bear in regard to Google (GOOG), leveling a series of high-profile verbal attacks on the company. ...
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